Patient motion effects on the quantification of regional myocardial blood flow with dynamic PET imaging

被引:67
作者
Hunter, Chad R. R. N. [1 ,2 ]
Klein, Ran [3 ,4 ]
Beanlands, Rob S. [2 ]
deKemp, Robert A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Carleton Univ, Dept Phys, Herzberg Labs, Room 3302,1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada
[2] Univ Ottawa, Inst Heart, Cardiac Imaging, 40 Ruskin St, Ottawa, ON K1Y 4W7, Canada
[3] Ottawa Hosp, Dept Nucl Med, Civ Campus,1053 Carling Ave, Ottawa, ON K1Y 4E9, Canada
[4] Univ Ottawa, Inst Heart, Ottawa, ON K1Y 4W7, Canada
关键词
PET; myocardial perfusion; patient motion; gross patient motion; perfusion imaging; PET imaging; TECHNICAL ASPECTS; PERFUSION PET; PHANTOM DATA; RB-82; O-15-WATER; RECONSTRUCTION; STRESS; MODELS; REST;
D O I
10.1118/1.4943565
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: Patient motion is a common problem during dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) scans for quantification of myocardial blood flow (MBF). The purpose of this study was to quantify the prevalence of body motion in a clinical setting and evaluate with realistic phantoms the effects of motion on blood flow quantification, including CT attenuation correction (CTAC) artifacts that result from PET-CT misalignment. Methods: A cohort of 236 sequential patients was analyzed for patient motion under resting and peak stress conditions by two independent observers. The presence of motion, affected time-frames, and direction of motion was recorded; discrepancy between observers was resolved by consensus review. Based on these results, patient body motion effects on MBF quantification were characterized using the digital NURBS-based cardiac-torso phantom, with characteristic time activity curves (TACs) assigned to the heart wall (myocardium) and blood regions. Simulated projection data were corrected for attenuation and reconstructed using filtered back-projection. All simulations were performed without noise added, and a single CT image was used for attenuation correction and aligned to the early-or late-frame PET images. Results: In the patient cohort, mild motion of 0.5 +/- 0.1 cm occurred in 24% and moderate motion of 1.0 +/- 0.3 cm occurred in 38% of patients. Motion in the superior/inferior direction accounted for 45% of all detected motion, with 30% in the superior direction. Anterior/posterior motion was predominant (29%) in the posterior direction. Left/right motion occurred in 24% of cases, with similar proportions in the left and right directions. Computer simulation studies indicated that errors in MBF can approach 500% for scans with severe patient motion (up to 2 cm). The largest errors occurred when the heart wall was shifted left toward the adjacent lung region, resulting in a severe undercorrection for attenuation of the heart wall. Simulations also indicated that the magnitude of MBF errors resulting from motion in the superior/inferior and anterior/posterior directions was similar (up to 250%). Body motion effects were more detrimental for higher resolution PET imaging (2 vs 10 mm full-width at half-maximum), and for motion occurring during the mid-to-late time-frames. Motion correction of the reconstructed dynamic image series resulted in significant reduction in MBF errors, but did not account for the residual PET-CTAC misalignment artifacts. MBF bias was reduced further using global partial-volume correction, and using dynamic alignment of the PET projection data to the CT scan for accurate attenuation correction during image reconstruction. Conclusions: Patient body motion can produce MBF estimation errors up to 500%. To reduce these errors, new motion correction algorithms must be effective in identifying motion in the left/right direction, and in the mid-to-late time-frames, since these conditions produce the largest errors in MBF, particularly for high resolution PET imaging. Ideally, motion correction should be done before or during image reconstruction to eliminate PET-CTAC misalignment artifacts. (C) 2016 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:1829 / 1840
页数:12
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